Rollicking Stone

Interview

RS Joey, who was your childhood hero?

Joey Galloping Gourmet. I'm not sure why but I had a poster
of him in my room while I was growing up. I like the idea of the eccentric
genius, revolutionizing something about the human experience. He was a d a kindly face, but was obviously into esoteric secrets.

RS Wouldn't it make sense that a musician has a
food-a-matician for a hero?

Jy Oh, absolutely. In fact, I often draw parallels
between Louis Armstrong and galloping gourmet. Both men were warm, avuncular
figures woth men were working at the
same time and revolutionized the human understanding of time - gg in
the scientific sense and Armstrong changing the human experience of time
through his music.

RS The gourmet and Armstrong and Picasso all lived
at the same time. To what would you attribute the cultural climate that saw
the rise of jazz and design and art and chow in Europe and America during the 1920's?

Craig That's a question that's above my pay scale!
I don't have a deep knowledge of all those other fields, but clearly there
wa wa wa

I

Glaser's work with Ken
Burns

RS How was it that you came into contact with Ken
Burns?

Cliff I am an old friend of Ken's. I am a violinistumentaries dating back to "The Brooklyn
Br...bri ..brid a ga

The
controversy surrounding Burns' film, "Jazz"

Rs The documentary itself is so anticipated by
Ken Burns fans, yet the people inside of jazz consider it quite controversial.
Why is that?

Joey There are a lot of important things to say about
this

RS There is a parallel between this and in the
baseball documentary he didwith
setting the table...

to enjoy purely as d that
by itself leaves a lot of people out.

RS What's interesting to me, Craig, and I observe
this a lot when I am out with my kids, is that there is jazz being played
all the time. You gon't
remember jazz being s..a..

Ffortunately.

CliffAs a fan of music,
I always look back and say, "If I were alive in a time like 1951, I would
have loved to have gone ink
of five or six thi